Publication | Closed Access
Detection of bone glue treatment as a major source of contamination in ancient DNA analyses
28
Citations
8
References
2002
Year
Bone Glue TreatmentGeneticsDna AnalysisMolecular BiologyArchaeologyMajor SourceOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryPaleogenetic InvestigationsGelatine-based Bone GlueBiological ResidueBioarchaeologyTaphonomyCriminal Dna DatabaseDna SequencingPaleoanthropologyDna ReplicationAncient Dna AnalysesTaphonomic BiasBiologyNatural SciencesAncient DnaForensic IdentificationMedicine
Paleogenetic investigations of ancient DNA extracted from fossil material is for many reasons susceptible to falsification by the presence of more recent contamination from several sources. Gelatine-based bone glue that has been used extensively for nearly two centuries by curators to preserve hard tissues contributes nonauthentic DNA to paleontological material. This fact has been frequently neglected and is barely mentioned in the literature. Now paleogeneticists, curators, and conservators are faced with the problem that treatment of samples with adhesives and consolidants for conservatory purposes has seldom been recorded. Here, we show that racemization of amino acids, and in particular serine, is an excellent indicator for the treatment of paleontological samples with glue.
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